Glossary entry (derived from question below)
English term or phrase:
A is over 30kg è B is less than 6mm.
English answer:
A is over 30kg & B is less than 6mm.
Added to glossary by
Katalin Horváth McClure
Feb 19, 2010 02:19
14 yrs ago
English term
A is over 30kg è B is less than 6mm.
English
Tech/Engineering
Transport / Transportation / Shipping
I am unable to find the exact meaning of "è". It describes a certain condition of parcels. I just guessd that it means "and" like "et" in French but not sure, even I cannot determine what language it is...Please help me. Thank you in advance.
Responses
5 +6 | A is over 30kg & B is less than 6mm. | Katalin Horváth McClure |
Change log
Feb 19, 2010 02:30: Katalin Horváth McClure changed "Language pair" from "English to Japanese" to "English"
Jul 22, 2011 23:02: Katalin Horváth McClure Created KOG entry
Responses
+6
7 mins
Selected
A is over 30kg & B is less than 6mm.
Typo for &, or more likely the document was scanned and then read by an OCR software and the ampersand (&) was recognized as è.
I think it is this simple.
I think it is this simple.
Peer comment(s):
agree |
Yasutomo Kanazawa
: Makes sense and convincing.
13 mins
|
agree |
William Murphy
: 'è' means 'is' in Italian whereas 'e' without the accent is simply 'and'. It is almost certain that this is what was intended.
4 hrs
|
agree |
Jack Doughty
: On a Spanish keyboard and probably on some other keyboards too, the "6" and "&" are the same key, "6" is lower case and "&" is upper case.
5 hrs
|
agree |
B D Finch
: On French keyboards, è is on the "7" key, while "&" is what you get with the same key + shift on an English keyboard. I use one keyboard and shortcut between French and English setups.
6 hrs
|
agree |
Attila Piróth
: Either OCR problem, or a mixup of French and English keyboards, as noted by Barbara.
6 hrs
|
agree |
Adsion Liu
4 days
|
4 KudoZ points awarded for this answer.
Comment: "Thanks all answerers. I submitted the translation as meaning of "&" with a comment but I haven't received the feedback from the clent.
The "&" would be most probable..."
Discussion